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Germantown Colony Museum reopens in Minden, 1800s artifacts preserved

Friends of Germantown Colony Museum Facebook

Germantown Colony Museum in Minden, Louisiana, reopened Thursday after a year-long construction of a visitor’s center.

Credit Friends of Germantown Colony Museum Facebook

The new dogtrot-style building showcases German settlers who established a commune in North Louisiana beginning in the mid-1800s in a quest to avoid religious persecution.

Lynn Dorsey, executive director of the Webster Parish Convention and Visitors Bureau, said the $512,000 project ensures that artifacts will be preserved.

“They were exposed to all the elements. There was nowhere to keep them preserved. Now, we have an exhibit area for that and we have handicap-accessible bathrooms and ramps, which are really important for tour groups,” Dorsey said.

Museum director Jean Doerge saw this project through every step, beginning in 2008 when she worked as a state lawmaker to secure funding for the building. Webster Parish was able to raise more than $60,000 through in-kind donations of plumbing and electrical along with other monetary donations. This was the last museum added to the state system and more than 100 artifacts are on display.

“We are telling a part of history that’s almost been lost. We’re opening that up to not only adults but children as well,” Doerge said, who helped dozens of tourists see Germantown Colony last month even though the visitor’s center was still under construction.

Dorsey says museum-goers get a sense of how disciplined these settlers were, even making silk from silkworms and spinning it on a wheel.

“Once you pass through the visitor’s center and through big gates, it opens up and you see the colony and the existing buildings as they stand currently. You see the beautiful, vast hillside beyond and the actual buildings that still remain. That’s where the actual colony was,” Dorsey said.

The museum is open Thursdays through Saturdays from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday shuttle buses will transport visitors from Minden’s Fasching Fifth Season Celebration that recognizes the town’s distinctive German heritage. The event begins at 10 a.m.

Copyright 2021 Red River Radio. To see more, visit Red River Radio.

Chuck Smith
Chuck Smith brings more than 30 years' experience to Red River Radio having started out as a radio news reporter and moving into television journalism as a newsmagazine producer / host, talk-show moderator, programming director and managing producer and news director / anchor for commercial, public broadcasting and educational television. He has more recently worked in advertising, marketing and public relations as a writer, video producer and media consultant. In pursuit of higher learning, Chuck studied Mass Communications at Southern Arkansas University in Magnolia and motion picture / television production at the University of California at Los Angeles. He has also taught writing for television at York Technical College in Rock Hill, South Carolina and video / film production at Centenary College of Louisiana, Shreveport.

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